Recipe Guide:
Grandma’s Apple Dumplings Recipe – Cozy, buttery pockets of nostalgia
Introduction
The house smelled like Sunday: warm cinnamon, butter melting, and the sweet hiss of orange-sugar bubbling on the stove. I pulled these out of the oven and felt like a kid again—this is my Grandma’s Apple Dumplings, the one that always ended our family dinners. This always takes me back to Sunday dinners. If you want more apple ideas, visit my apple dumplings page for similar favorites and mini-versions.
Why You’ll Love This
- Quick to assemble; ready in about an hour.
- Kid-approved: flaky rollouts hide tender apple.
- Budget-friendly with pantry staples.
- Comforting sauce — bright orange lifts the sweetness.
Quick Recipe Snapshot
- Servings: 4
- Prep time: 15 minutes
- Cook time: 30 minutes
- Total time: 45 minutes
- Skill level: Easy
- Taste: sweet + spiced + buttery
Feel confident—this recipe is forgiving and great for busy afternoons.
Ingredients You’ll Need
- 2 Granny Smith apples (peeled, cored, and quartered)
- 1 can refrigerated crescent rolls (8 rolls)
- 1/8 tsp ground cinnamon
- ½ cup butter
- ¾ cup white sugar
- 1 cup orange juice
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
Chef notes:
- Granny Smith = tart, holds shape well.
- Refrigerated rolls = quick, flaky wrapper.
- Unsalted butter helps control salt.
- Fresh orange juice brightens the sauce.
- Use pure vanilla for depth.
For a shortcut twist, try the two-ingredient apple cinnamon roll bake when you’re short on time.
How to Make It
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). First, set a rack in the middle so heat circulates evenly.
- Unroll the crescent rolls. Then wrap each apple quarter with one roll, tucking seams so the apple is fully enclosed. You want no exposed apple.
- Place the wrapped apples seam-side down in a baking dish. Next, sprinkle the tops with ground cinnamon for a warm aroma as they bake.
- In a medium saucepan, combine the butter, orange juice, and sugar. Heat over medium until the butter melts and the sugar dissolves, stirring so it doesn’t burn. You’ll hear a gentle sizzle.
- Remove the pan from heat and stir in the vanilla extract. The sauce will smell bright and slightly floral.
- Pour the butter-orange sauce evenly over the apple rolls in the dish. Bake for 30 minutes, or until the crescent rolls turn golden brown and the apples feel tender when pierced with a fork. Look for bubbling sauce and golden edges — that’s your cue.
- Remove from oven, spoon extra sauce over the dumplings, and serve warm. The sauce should coat each dumpling and glisten on the plate.
Tip: If the tops brown too fast, loosely tent with foil for the last 10 minutes. Also, consider using the leftover sauce to spoon over pancakes or the apple butter cake for breakfast.
Kitchen Tips (From My Kitchen)
- Time-saver: Peel and core apples with a corer—cuts prep in half.
- Common mistake + fix: Rolls can unwrap while baking; seal seams tightly and place seam-side down.
- Simple variation: Add 1/4 tsp nutmeg to the cinnamon for warm spice.
Serving Ideas
- Weeknight dessert: Serve one dumpling with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.
- Brunch treat: Plate with Greek yogurt and a drizzle of sauce.
- Holiday finish: Garnish with toasted pecans and extra cinnamon.
- Cozy snack: Pair with a mug of hot cider for fall evenings; try alongside apple cake with cream cheese frosting for a big spread.
Storing & Leftovers
- Fridge: Store covered for up to 3 days; reheat gently.
- Freezer: Freeze baked dumplings in a single layer up to 1 month; thaw overnight.
- Reheat: Warm in a 325°F oven for 8–10 minutes to keep pastry crisp.
Leftover idea: Chop and fold into oats or yogurt for a quick breakfast bowl.
FAQs
Q: Can I make these ahead?
A: Yes — assemble and keep covered in the fridge for a few hours, then bake just before serving.
Q: Any good substitutions?
A: You can use brown sugar instead of white for a deeper caramel note. Also, swapping a sweet apple will make the dessert sweeter overall.
Q: How will I know it’s done?
A: The rolls should be golden and the sauce should bubble; the apples will be tender when pierced with a fork.
Q: Can I freeze it?
A: Yes, freeze baked dumplings for up to a month and reheat in the oven so the pastry stays flaky. For more apple baking ideas, try the apple cider bread with your leftover sauce.
Final Thoughts
I make these when I want something easy that still feels special; the citrusy sauce lifts the whole thing, and the kitchen always smells like home. Tweak the spices or swap apples to suit your family, but don’t skip the sauce — it’s the heart of this recipe. I hope this brings a little Sunday to your week with Grandma’s Apple Dumplings.
Conclusion
For another caramel-topped take, check the Baked Apple Dumplings with Caramel Sauce – Foodology Geek, and for a classic Allrecipes version, see Grandma’s Apple Dumplings Recipe – Allrecipes.

Apple Dumplings
Ingredients
Method
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C) and set a rack in the middle.
- Unroll the crescent rolls and wrap each apple quarter with one roll, tucking seams so the apple is fully enclosed.
- Place the wrapped apples seam-side down in a baking dish and sprinkle the tops with ground cinnamon.
- In a medium saucepan, combine the butter, orange juice, and sugar, heating over medium until the butter melts and sugar dissolves while stirring.
- Remove from heat and stir in the vanilla extract.
- Pour the butter-orange sauce evenly over the apple rolls in the dish.
- Bake for 30 minutes, or until crescent rolls are golden brown and the apples are tender when pierced with a fork.
- Remove from oven, spoon extra sauce over the dumplings, and serve warm.
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